The week that was
Minister of Agriculture Hon Saboto Caesar (left) with Managing Director of the St Vincent Chocolate Company Andrew Hadley
BEST WEEK EVER:
The St Vincent Cocoa Company (SVCC) invited a few lucky guests to unwrap a sweet belated Christmas gift: High-quality chocolate bars â made in SVG, from cocoa beans grown in SVG by Vincy farmers. The luxurious dark chocolate bar is the latest milestone on the growth of a viable cocoa industry in SVG.{{more}} Some of us will remember that in 2010, the Armajaro Cocoa company became a political football, with both parties claiming responsibility for attracting the multinational. Alas, local farmers didnât find Armajaroâs offers sweet enough, and the conglomerate quietly sold off its stake to the SVCC. Now, with production and quality increasing, and with the launch of a new candy bar, SVG can compete with the new chocolate industries in Grenada and St Lucia; not just in the production of raw beans, but also high-quality, uniquely Vincy chocolate products.
Runner-up:
WORST WEEK EVER:
How bad was Ben Exeterâs December? Letâs see: First he lost his election. Then, this week, he lost his Court application that challenged the election result. Then, finally, he lost freedom, as the police scuffled him up and dragged him away from a demonstration and into Central Station lock-up, where he was charged with assault and resisting arrest. Ben has gone so far as to allege police brutality during his time in custody, but it seems that the biggest bruises were to his ego. No one would blame Ben if he considered “Exitingâ SVG and re-migrating to his beloved Canada, where the cold weather and frosty business climate were much more welcoming than the Vincy electorate, judges and police.
Runner-up:
The New Democratic Party had another disheartening week in its efforts to challenge the 2015 election results through a double-barrelled attack of street protests and legal challenges. The daily demonstrations outside of the Electoral Office have been dismally attended, sometimes with only five lonely protesters banging drums and shouting bullhorn allegations of fraud. Even the big demonstration scheduled for the opening of Parliament was a disappointment, as a modest crowd of semi-interested dissenters and spectators watched NDP parliamentarians march into Parliament, get themselves marked “present,â and then march out.
Considering the heavy advance hype of the big demonstration, including the providing of free transportation for protestors, the turnout may signal dwindling interest in the NDPâs long-shot challenge against the election results. Luckily for the party, Ben Exeterâs late arrest at the protest may have salvaged the day, because the newspaper headlines said “Ben Arrestedâ instead of “Protest Flops.â Nonetheless, the absence of the NDP rank-and-file from the recent protest actions may force the party to take a fresh guard and try something new in their maddeningly fruitless quest to form government.
If I had a question in SVG Parliament
Media Watch
Modern media is a 24-7-365 affair. It never stops. Certainly, news doesnât ever go on vacation. Which is why the practice of weekly or semi-weekly newspapers closing up shop and not publishing on public holidays seems as old-fashioned as a night-time flambeau. Our newspapers arenât doing themselves any favours in this brave new media world with their weekly cycles, little-or-no Internet and social media presence, and traditional views about holidays and days-off.